Culloden (BBC, tx. 15/12/1964) marked the professional debut of writer/director Peter Watkins, who developed a ground-breaking alliance of documentary technique and vivid dramatic reconstruction.
A detailed study of the 1746 Battle of Culloden and the ensuing brutal
suppression of the Highland Scots, Culloden drew much of its analysis and
voice-over narration from the history book of the same name by John Prebble, who
was credited as historical adviser. Culloden's early section introduced the
audience to the battle's famous leaders and forgotten victims alike, documenting
the failures of the Highlanders' leadership and poor preparation, before
graphically dramatising the battle itself.
Drawing on his portrayals of organised violence and media myth in his earlier
amateur short films, Watkins honed his distinctive techniques. He brought the
reality of the conflict to a modern audience by using hand-held camerawork and
interviews to-camera to record the reactions of non-professional actors, who
were instructed to look at and acknowledge the camera, and whose convincing
suffering provoked rumours - as with Watkins' later banned The War Game (1965) - of real cruelty. Despite its low budget, Culloden achieved convincing battle
scenes by appealing to the imagination of the viewer, cutting quickly between
confused events and holding on tight close-ups while sound detailed unseen
horrors. The effect was occasionally heightened by devices like juddering the
camera as if the cameraman was responding in shock, and freeze-frames of
violence which capture the style of photo-reportage.
With these techniques, Watkins challenged documentary conventions, paralleled
the filmmaker's view with the presence within the action of a biased observing
historian, and showed the deficiencies of mainstream historical drama. He also
provocatively questioned national and historical myth - unpicking the romantic
picture of 'Bonnie Prince Charlie' - and of the British military. However,
Culloden was also politically radical on levels beyond its historical setting.
It questioned the brutal means by which the British establishment preserved
itself and, as an allegorical piece on war and state genocide, had a timeless
relevance; indeed, reviewers of Culloden's American debut in 1969 drew from its
portrayal of 'pacification' a comment on the Vietnam War.
Watkins' only success in challenging a mass television audience in Britain,
Culloden was successful enough to enable him to make The War Game, the project
he had first suggested on the nuclear deterrent - with dramatic results.
Dave Rolinson
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